MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1929 he Page Seven Real Boxing Features Garrett Boxing Bouts The hoxing bouts held by the Garrett Athletic Club on Decoration Day were all thrillers. ing was between George Gaspering of Shaw Mines and Wade Tucker of Gar- rett. Gaspering showed very fine work in the first round, but young Foxey Tucker was using head work and in the seccnd round, let loose with a banage of lefts and rights to‘the head and body and the fight was won by Tucker. In the second bout Bob Shockey of Rockwood, easily defeated young Court- ney of Meyersdale. The third bout was between Battling Walters of Garrett, and Andy Andrucci of the Willows Club of Pittsburgh. What Andrucci did to Walters was a cripe. He was far too fast for Walters and could hit him at any time he willed. Time after time Walters went down and several times he fell to save himself from punishment. The plain facts are that Andrucci had him outclassed’ in ring experience, and science which had Walters always daz- zled. The fourth bout was between young Lowery of Shaw Mines and Kid Bittner of Rockwood, Bittner gaining the deci- sion. Fifth bout, Gene Miller of Meyers- dale defeated David Romesberg of Gar- rett. That Romesberg has a wonderful fighting heart is a certainty as he stood up until the referee had to stop the fight. Sixth bout, Go Gettem Gettings of Je- rome, easily defeated Otis Naylor of Meyersdale in the first round. The Garrett Athletic Club has been “holding some very good bouts and should be complimented on the way that the shows are carried out. WEEKLY HEALTH TALK “Before many weeks have elapsed a ‘definite number of Pennsylvania’s citi- zens will be wheezing and sneezing, vie- tims of so-called hay fever. And while they are thus suffering and waiting for that distant event of a ‘fall frost’ they will get little relief from any source. Therefore, on the surface, the lot of the hay fever subject appears to be a hard one,” said Dr. Theodore B. Appel. Sec- retary of Health, today. “As a matter of fact, science has de- veloped a quite successful method to combat this seasonal affliction. To begin with, only that comparatively small mi- nority of individuals who possess an un- usual sensitiveness to the pollens of cer-. tain plants, weeds, grasses and trees are ever subject to hay fever. And this fact has been made possible the develop- ment of counteracting serum. “In order to make this modern treat- ment effective it is necessary to discover the particular pollen that is causing the disturbance. This calls for a visit to a physician who is prepared to make tests with extracts of pollens that may be logically suspected of causing the trou- ble in the particular case. “The test is exceedingly simple as well as painless. By way of a needle prick a bit of each extract finds its way under the skin. The particular extract that causes a slight local reaction quite de- finitely fixes the offender. Then inno- culations of that type are administered. “The success in this therapy lies in establishing immunity before the pollen season. Afterwards is likely to be too late. Therefore, it behooves all hay fever sufferers to take advantage of this scientific weapon without delay. It may not be effective or perhaps merely par- tially so, but the percentage of successes is sufficiently high to test this treatment. Get the edge on hay fever before it gets the edge on you.” Education by Radio The Federal Radio Commission has | been giving hearings on the subject of education by radio. These hearings have been participated in by Secretary of the Interior, Ray Lyman Wilbur. Leading radio authorities and others, have ex- pressed their opinions to the Commis- sion. The Chairman of the Commission, Ira E. Robinson, suggested that instruc- tion by radio, whatever its form, should be under direct Government supervision —by the Government of the Nation, if they would be worthy of the vote for which they fought so hard. The daughter of Mark Hanna talks in the same language used by her father. Her progress in the senatorial fight will be watched with national interest. BASEBALL IN THE COUNTY LEAGUE Memorial Day Somerset fittingly cele- brated the occasion by defeating Jerome on the Somerset grounds 2 to 1. Pick- ing for the local, pitched a beautiful game. Friday, Central City defeated Windber at Windber at a score 7 to 6. On Saturday at Hooversville team shut out the Somerset nine 2 to 0. Sunday, Central City defeated Windber at a score of 11 to 7. Some people thought that they used dice in this game. Jerome defeated Hooversville 11 to 2 and Kelso gave Windben a goose egg at Windber in a score of 3 to 0. On Tuesday, the Kelso team defeated the Somerset nine at Somerset by the score of 12 to 0. President Hoover calls Governor Al Smith a great public servant and this is one Republican charge which the good governor probably will not take the pains to deny. Scientists are predicting a wide- spread plague of June bugs this year. Congress will have to hurry tc get the remedy for this in the farm re-| lief bill in time to do any good. FARM CALENDAR Provide Shelter for Chicks—A simple outdoor shelter for chicks will relieve The first bout of the even- | TOW ded conditions in the brooder house. It will also provide ample ventilation and cool roosting quarters during the summer months. A sanitary range shel- ter should be provided. Eradicate Injurious Weed—Buckhorn is a weed found abundantly in all parts of the state. It injures lawns, meadows, and pastures. Where only a few plants are growing in the lawn, they can be removed by hand-digging. If plentiful, each plant should be cut with a hoe and the fresh surface treated with crude carbolic acid. Badly infested pastures should be plowed and planted to inter- tilled crops for two seasons. Hog Pastures Pay—Good pasture for growing pigs, brood sows, and all classes of swine is so valuable that it often makes the difference between profit and loss in the hog business. Potato Spraying Essential—Spraying is an essential practice in successful po- tato culture. Farmers who applied timely and thorough sprays last year grew their crops at the lowest cost per bushel. On the other hand, those grow- ers who did a poor job of spraying, or did not spray at all, had the highest unit of production. - Control Chicken Insects—Lice and mites are poultry pests which can be controlled effectively. Use nicotine sul- phate for lice and creosote or carboli- neum for mites. Apply the chemicals on the roosts. Feed Cows on Pasture—Dairymen find feeding grain to cows on pasture is absolutely essential for high yearly milk production. They supplement the pas- ture with good quality hay, summer si- ‘lage, or soiling crops, in addition to a grain mixture. College Holds Farmer's Day—Thou- sands will attend the annual Farmers’ Pennsylvania State College. ANNOUNCE LIST WHO PASS STATE EXAMS Successful Applicants for Certificates of Mine Foremen, Assistants and Bosses. mle The successful applicants for certi- ficates of qualification to act as mine foremen, assistant mine foremen and fire bosses, in the Twentieth Bitum- inous District, are as follows: Mine Foremen, First Grade William J. Smith, Jerome. George P. Foreman, Jerome. John E. Kimmel, Que-Creek. Second Grade Robert Mull, Jerome. Harry H. Stahl, Jerome. Clement J. Mulvihill, Jenners Fredrick W. Bohn, Hooversvillc. James M. Kimmel, Stoyestown, R.D. 2 Samuel H. Wetmiller, Berlin. John F. Smith, Jerome. William M. Kiser, Kimmelton. First Grade Assistant Mine Foremen Frank Fraley, Jerome. Harry H. Stahl, Jerome. Louis Cornell, Boswell, R. D. 2. Clement J. Mulvihill, Jenners. Fredrick W. Bohn, Hooversville. Fire Bosses Carl P. Hay, Jerome. John F. Smith, Jerome. Joseph Keblesh, Gray. Clair E. Johnston, Jenners. Richard F. Swartzwelder, Jerome. Leroy Saylor, Stoyestown, R. D. 1. Archibald T. Gray, Jerome. Harold D. Berkey, Jerome. Jacob F. Diehl, Ernest. John I. Shawley, Jenners. Mrs. Tobias Weimer Of Somerset Expires Mrs. Anna A. Weimer, aged 62, wife of Tobias Weimer of Somerset, died at 6:45 o’clock Monday morning at her home in Somerset, where she had been seriously ill for the last three weeks. Mrs. Weimer’s health had been impaired for several months. She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Perry Walker and spent her entire life in Somerset county. In addition to her husband, Mrs. Weimer is survived by the following children: Charles E., Alton R. and Russell Weimer, Somerset; Mrs. Wil- liam Grosser, Meyersdale, and Mrs. Ruth Blough and Mrs. J. Harold Swank, Johnstown. The following brothers and sisters survive: Harvey Walker, Mrs. Eva Edson and Miss Hattie Walker, Carleton, Neb.; Cleve- land and Ernest Walker, McCook, Neb., and Mrs. C. R. Koontz, Rock- wood. Funeral services were conducted at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the residence, in charge of the Rev. Dr. I. Hess Wagner, pastor of the Trinity Lutheran church. Interment was made in the Odd Fellows’ cemetery. It is said that Germany has learned installment buying from the United States. Well that is one way to get even with her for the war. | If some chemist would only find a | way to make automobile tires out of | "morrow—and Field Day on June 20 and 21 at the | corn the farm problem would be solved. Loneliness Routed by Cupid By JESSIE DOUGLAS SO® y ® ( Copyrizht: ) 13 HAT do people do to get ac- quainted 2” Annie Laurie Ware thought desperately. “Now, if I should just stop this man coming and say ‘I'm so desperate- ly lonely thay I'd like to cry,’ I won- der what he'd do. Call a policeman, Ispose . . .” Annie Laurie had come quite close to him now: he glanced at her casual- ly and when he did she felt the blood color her face. “Just as though he knew what I was thinking!” Annie Laurie went on disconsolately, as she turned the corner. She stopped a moment before a shop window; it was a very tiny shop with just enough glass to show Boston ferns and some narcissus blooming in a shallow bowl. “He'd say ‘Would you rather have violets today, Annie Laurie, or just roses as usual?” - “Anything I can do for you, miss?” Annie Laurie started. She realized she had stopped longer than she need before this window. “Yes, I should like a bulb,” she said, boldly, “and some pebbles and a very little bowl.” “Forty-five, miss.” Annie Laurie just had fifty cents left and she realized with a pang that it meant she would have no lunch to- she hoped there would be no delay with her pay envelope. She snuggled her precious bulb un- der her arm and made the journey back to her room without further ad- venture. “It must have sun and it must have water,” she said aloud as she set it in the open window ledge. She let the water drip over her bulb and heard an irritated voice as- cend from the regions below. Annie Laurie peered down, and the voice peered up, until she found her- self looking into the very blue eyes of the man she had passed. “Oh, it’s you!” she gasped. Then overcome at the betrayal of her words, she pulled in her head. and fn her embarrassment dislodged her precious bulb. She heard it go rat- tling down the areaway amid the sharp clatter of her pebbles. ; “Pll see what I can do,” a sym- pathetic voice called up to her. “Remember, Annie Laurie, how you were brought up!” she warned her- self. When, five minutes later, a breath- less young man with laughing blue eyes presented her with a stubby brown bulb, Annie Laurie, with drooped lids that hid all the light of her dancing eyes, answered primly, “Thank you very much.” That was all. And Annie Laurie back in her room was lonelier than ever. “] know he’s nice,” she thought. “He has eyes like little Bennie, and his voice—and I shall just have to go on the same as ever, dying of loneliness, going down to the office in the morning and coming back in the evening, wishing in the meantime.” And she did. The ache in her heart was get- ting harder to bear all the time, and if it hadn’t been for the five dollars she could send each week to a little frame house in St. Petersburg, she might have given up the struggle and fled home. One afternoon -she stopped before the tiny shop and breathed in the scent of trailing arbutus. “I must have some!” she said. The little, bushy, fragrant sprays of sweet blossoms were tied in white tissue before she asked, “And how much is it, please?” “Seventy-five.” She searched in her pocket and she felt in her purse, but all she could find was fifty cents. Her cheeks burned with embarrassment for another cus- tomer in the shop came up to her. Annie Laurie looked up into a pair of very blue eyes. “T believe you live on the floor above me, and I believe I rescued your bulb,” said the man of the eyes quiet- ly, “and I think if I'm not mistaken you're Annie Laurie Ware?” “Oh, but how did you know?” He did not tell her that anyone could read a name on the letter box. “IT know you've never done any- thing like it before, spoken to a man who hasn’t been introduced,” he ex- plained, “and 1 hope you won't do anything like it again. But I'm from the South, and I know you are—and I’m- desperately lonely—” It was the one thing that could have touched Annie Laurie Ware. They stood quite still outside the tiny shop, ald the man pleaded: “I wonder if you’d let me get some violets, a handful, or just a rose to celebrate?” “Roses,” Annie Laurie smiled, and then as he darted into the shop she repeated the formula to herself, “as usual.” They walked up the street together, and the man said “Look!” Annie Laurie gazed down from the heights at the street that seemed al- most like fairy street. “New York is an enchanting place, isn’t it?” the young man asked. “It’s almest like a city of dreams,” Annie Laurie answered tremulously. The yourg man gave one swift un- derstanding glance at her face before they turned back. “It is the city of my dreams—now!” | he said. THE GAME The Moonbeams looked very bright and happy gleaming from the sky. “Don’t you want us?’ they asked, though they al- ready knew the an- swer to their ques- tion. “Of course 1 want you,” said Mr. Moon, “and so do the people. Moonbeams are so happy and ’ gay. They dance and they almost Seem to sing.” “We'll sing just for you, Mr. Moon,” they said. And the Moon- beams sang this #iLet Me See?” song: Oh, not when it's day, Do we laugh and play. But when it is night, ‘We shine and are bright. We laugh and we sing, We love everything. We love Mr. Moon, And soon, very soon, We're going to shine, For a party of nine. “That’s a wonderful song,” said Mr. Moon, “but might I ask how you're going to shine for a party of nine? “Did you say that just for rhyme?” “We might have,” said the Moon- beams, “but we didn’t have to this time. “There are nine people going on the sleighride which you and we are going to accompany. There are eight children and a nice, good-natured farmer daddy who seems to be enjoying the ride as much as the children.” “Let me see,” said Mr. Moon, as he blinked one eye. “The moon is very bright tonight,” said the children, “It will be wonder- ful for our ride. See how the moon- beams dance, too!” “Well, well,” said Mr. Moon, ‘we certainly must keep on going along with them. They've noticed us and they seem to like us.” So the Moon seemed to shine more brightly than ever—even such a high creature as he enjoyed a little extra praise. It does almost every ome good to hear something nice once in awhile. “They seemed pleased to see us dance,” said the Moombeams. “We'll give them a special treat of our own game—our moonbeam game of tag.” “Do,” said Mr. Moon. “They’ll en- joy that.” So the Moonbeams danced and played tag with each other, and Mr. Moon beamed, too, and shone for all he was worth. : “The Moon is so bright,” the chil- dren kept saying, as they went bound- ing over the snow in their long sleigh which was filled with straw. “It almost seems as if I conld catch a moonbeam,” said one child. The Moonbeams went 80 near the children they thought they could catch them, but the Moonbeams got away in time, for they said they could not be caught by really real children, the beams. The snow was so soft and white and sparkling. The snowflakes which had fallen to the ground, said to the Moonbeams: “Make us look like glorious dia- monds and glittering jewels. We want to appear royal and noble and beautiful before the children.” And the Moon: beams did as the snowflakes had asked. What a daz- zling night it was as they rode along over the snow with the Moon, the Moonbeams and the children of old King Snow as their companions. When the chil dren reached the home of the little boy “who had giv- en the party, and were having some delicious hot supper, every child in turn said: “I almost caught a Moonbedm” Outside the window the Moonbeams were still dancing and looking at the children and laughing: “They Catch Us.” Couldn't # “They couldn’t catch us, they couldn’t catch wus. They .couldn’t catch us.” And the Moon answered them and said: “No, little Moonbeams, in your game of moonbeam tag you can only catch each other, and even then it's very hard. “But what a glorious game you do play!” Feminine Inquisitiveness Among the group at the pier every day was a selfish little girl of ten who extravagantly admired the young man who swam and dived so splen- didly. With true feminine inquisitiveness She asked: “Do you live with your mother, or are you a father?” or they wouldn't be really real moon-: ERR ART gala lale (AE BONNER. See. COPYRIGHT BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION ki THE RAG DOLL It was a little time before Christ. mas, and Judy dreamed that she was up in Santa’s workshop. There she saw tables and tables and tables with half-made toys upon them. She saw huge barrels and packing cases and toys being taken off. She saw Santa’s huge pack which he wore upon his back on Christmas Eve as he went to visit all the boys and girls in the world. She saw toys which were all finished and were standing up by each other in rows, which hadn’t been put away for the great Christmas season yet. There were Teddy Bears and woolly lambs, little pink rag pigs and there were trains of cars and boats and air- planes. There were games and balls and tops. There were sailor boy suits. There were whistles and all sorts of toy animals. There were dolls all beautifully dressed with china faces and china bodies. There were some with rag bodies but china faces, and there were others —oh, there were so many of all sorts she simply couldn’t look at them all. She felt dizzy looking at so many. And she saw Santa Claus, his red coat lying on a chair nearby, working for all he was worth, making toy after toy, painting one, putting it together, fixing it so it would be all right. There he was, his white beard hang- ing way down on his chest and his eyes—well, she had never seen such eyes before. They were laughing! laughing. Yes, actually She saw those blue eyes of his twinkle and—she saw them laugh. Oh, how happy he looked. And yet Oh, How She Would Love That Doll. how busy he was. He no sooner fin- ished one toy than he made another. Goodness! How quickly he worked. Now he was making—what was it— could it be? Judy held her breath. This was al- most too exciting! Yes, he was actually making a doll —the very sort she wanted—a nice rag doll with a painted face, a doll to hug and love. Oh, how she would love that doll Santa Claus was making. Then it seemed as thought the shop were far away and the toys grew less and less clear, and the last she saw was an arm of a rag doll being fin- ished while Santa smiled as though to say: “You'll do, little doll, you'll do.” Then she heard her mother calling her to get up. “It’s late,” her mother said. “Oh mother,” Betty began, “I had such a dream. I dreamed I saw Santa Claus in his shop. “Oh, he was the most beautiful old man I ever saw in all my life—and yet he wasn’t exactly old—no, not old at all. : “Oh mother, you should have seen his eyes! How they laughed. “And he was making—think, mother -—he was making a rag doll. The very sort of a doll I hope he will give me for Christmas. “Do you suppose he may give me that doll, motggr? And I saw the whole shop and all the toys—and everything. “Oh, I hope Santa Claus brings me a rag doll.” . Now the Dream King had sent this dream to Judy, and it was as real as a dream can be. But it was absglutely real that Santa Claus was making a rag doll and that that rag doll was going to be found on Christmas morning in Judy's stocking. For the Dream King had told Santa Claus it was what she wanted and that was why Santa Claus had smiled so when he had finished making the doll—because he knew how the doll was going to please Judy, and how dearly she would love it. Love and Kisses to All A woman had taken her three-year- old boy into the voting booth while her husband voted in that adjoining. When they met after casting their bal- lots, the little chap said to his father: “Daddy, mother must love all the politicians.” “How is that?” the father wanted to know. “Well, I saw her mark kisses after a lot of their names.” Preparing Willie—What did I learn today, teacher? Teacher—Why do you ask? Willie—They’ll want to know at home.—Christian Advocate. ‘Somerset News Mr. and Mrs. M. Berkebile and daughter, Helen, of Hooversville, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. New- comer here recently. Miss Mildred Bauman, employed as a stenographer in the Somerset County Farm Bureau office, is spending her va- cation with relatives and friends in Huntingdon, Pa., and 2 Washington; D, CG. Mr. and Mrs. “John | S. Scurfield and son, Burton, of Harrisburg, spent Me- morial Day at the home of Mr. Scur- field’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Scurfield, of West Race street. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Fogle, of Berlin, were visitors Memorial Day at the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald D. Friedline. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Woy, of Pitts- burgh, spent Memorial Day with rela- tives and friends in Somerset. They were accompanied home by the former's mother, Mrs. Catherine Woy, of East Catherine street, who will remain for a visit at the Woy home. Mr, and Mrs. A. C. Barron, of Grand Rapids, Mich., are guests at the home of Mrs. Jennie Brugh, of West Patriot street. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Lowry, Jr., and two children, of Johnstown, spent Me- morial Day at the home of Mr. Lowry’s parents, Attorney and Mrs. J. C. Low- ry, of South Somerset. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Thorpe, of Akron, Ohio, spent the week end visiting relatives in Somerset and Berlin. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Hauger, of Boynton, Pa., were business callers in Somerset, Tuesday of this week. They visited with their daughter, Mrs. Elmer J. Shaulis. Miss Marian Shaulis was home on a visit last Sunday. She returned to In- diana Monday forenoon, by automobile. Martha Meyers, eight-year-old daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Millard Meyers of West Union street, underwent an oper- ation for the removal of her tonsils at the Community hospital. She is getting along nicely. Mrs. William E. Griffith and daughter, Mary Alice, and her mother, Mrs. George Bragdon of West Main street, left by automobile this week for Pueblo, Col., where they will spent the summer. This is the fourth trip Mrs. Griffith has made by motor to her former home. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Kohns, their daugh- ter, Sarah Louise, and son, Dale, of Turtle Creek, are visiting relatives and friends in Somerset. Robert Frease has returned home from a visit in Pittsburgh. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swisher and son, of Akron, O., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Swisher’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Albright of East Main street. Mrs. A. L. Cage will be hostess at the regular meeting of the Ladies’ Mission- ary society of the Christian church at her home, 165 East Patriot street, on Thursday evening, June 6. The recently elected officers will be installed. Miss Olive Combecker, Miss Susan Zearfoss and John Zearfoss and Harold Will left Somerset, Saturday by motor for Philadelphia, where they will visit for several days with Albert Zearfoss, who is a student at a blind school in that city. Albert is a brother of Miss Zearfoss and Mr. Zearfoss. Mrs. Emma Porter, of Akron, O., is visiting Somerset friends and relatives Miss Elizabeth Markel and Miss Laura Shaulis, students at Hood college, arrived in Somerset Friday evening and will spend the summer with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Markel of East Race street, and Dr. and Mrs. E. F. Shaulis of North Kimberly avenue. Rex King of Pittsburgh, is visiting at the home of his father and sister, the Rev. Hiram King and Mrs. Jean Ferner of West Union street. Mrs. Minnie Shaulis and son, Nelson, have returned home from a visit to Pittsburgh. John H. Woy, of Henry, W. Va, spent the week end with his family on East Patriot street. Mrs. Budd B. Boose is visiting for several days with her sister, Mrs. C. P. Large, of Meyersdale. McMullen, Chief of Police of S. WW. Windber, was a business caller here Monday. Ex-Sheriff William C. Begley, of Springdale Farm, near Somerset, was a business caller in Johnstown Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Cochran and young son, of Connellsville, were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Cochran, of West Main street. Members of the Friendly Helpers class of the Trinity Lutheran Sunday School were entertained Thursday by Mrs. Effie Dixon and Mrs. Charles Beachem at a delightful event at the latter's home on West Church street. The evening was spent in sewing and a pleasant social hour during which re- freshments- were served. Attorney Daryle R. Heckman is teacher of the class. Somerset News R. E. Gower, of Johnstown spent the week end with his family on South Cen- ter avenue: The Rev. and Mrs. Edward Boyer, who reside near Philadelphia, are vis- iting at the home of Mrs. Boyer’s broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Oran G. Kantner of West Main street. Capt. William H. Miller, of Stoyes- town, visited relatives and friends at the county seat Friday. Fred Sann, of Boswell, transacted business at the county seat Friday. Miss Ruth Doy, of East Patriot street was a visitor in Johnstown, recently. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Pyle, of West Main street were honored at a farewell dinner party Wednesday evening at the White Star Hotel, Jennertown. Seven- teen guestsiwere present. Mr. and Mrs. Pyle will leave Somerset in the near future for Everett, Bedford County, where they will make their future home. John M. Yost, of Fairmont, W. Va., is spending a short vacation with his mother, Mrs. H. F. Yost, of Fairview street. ! Mr. and Mrs. John Ryan have return- ed from a motor trip to Circleville; O., where they were called by the death of Mr. Ryan’s elder brother. Miss Marie Winters, a niece of Mrs. Ryan was at the wheel. Mrs. Clarke Brenckenridge, of Union- town is visiting at the home of her son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ber E. Schell, of West Union street. Prof. Henry Menser, of Slippery Rock State Normal School, is spending the summer vacation at his home in East Somerset. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Eichelberger have returned to their home in Pitts- burgh, after a visit here with Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Eichelberger. Lloyd Mostoller, Miss Nellie Kiser and Mrs. Ida Mostoller have returned to their homes, after a visit in Johns- town. The evangelistic services, which have been in progress the last two weeks in the Evangelical church here will con- tinue until Thursday evening. The Rev. E. J. Dunlap is conducting the services. Harry Day and children, of Central # City were the guests of friends here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. James Dearmitt an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Lois Ethel. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wilson of Johnstown spent the week end at the ‘Wright home here. Mr. and Mrs. Ho aer Eschrich and children have returned from a visit in McKeesport with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Close. Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Sipe were guests of friends in Somerset over the week end. .- Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Sipe of Somerset spent the last few days here at the Charles Sipe home. Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Bowers and chil- dren, Ruth, Sarah, Netta Jane and Wil- liam spent the week end in Somerset with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Letcher. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Keith and chil- dren, Clarence, Lloyd and Anna, of Hooversville spent the last few days here with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Keith. Paul Stutzman, who is serving his second enlistment in the army, has re- turned to service in the Panama canal zone, after spending the last two weeks here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Helsel and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Helsel of Johnstown are spending a few days here with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marrelli and children are spending a few days here with Mr. and Mrs. James Bossetti. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Trent and children have concluded a visit in Petersburg with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Wilkins of Un- iontown have concluded a visit here with Joseph Brachey. Leroy Trent and daughter, Metta, of Mispah have concluded a visit here with friends and relatives. Richard Williams and Marshall Ber- nard, of Listie, are spending a few days here with friends. Frank Cugnie and son, James, of Akron, O., were recent visitors here. Mrs. Anna Fugestine, of Windber, is spending a few days here at the home of C. O. Carleson. Mr. and Mrs. Rush Sorber and som, Sheldon, of Hooversville, spent the week end here with Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Con- ner. Miss Agnes Baseitti, of Jerome, spent the last few days here with relatives. Miss Evelyn Gushbar has gone to Akron, O., where she will spend a few days with friends and relatives.